A Species stands beyond—
Invisible, as Music—
But positive, as Sound—
It beckons, and it baffles—
Philosophy, don't know—
And through a Riddle, at the last—
Sagacity, must go—
To guess it, puzzles scholars—
To gain it, Men have borne
Contempt of Generations
And Crucifixion, shown—
Faith slips—and laughs, and rallies—
Blushes, if any see—
Plucks at a twig of Evidence—
And asks a Vane, the way—
Much Gesture, from the Pulpit—
Strong Hallelujahs roll—
Narcotics cannot still the Tooth
That nibbles at the soul –
F373
(1862) 501
As she
does in numerous other poems, Dickinson begins this one with a claim: “This
World is not conclusion.” The rest of the poem fleshes that idea out. There is
more to reality than this everyday world we live in, but we can only form
conjectures about it. Christianity has inspired martyrs but Faith still
“slips.” There really is no conclusion—all our searchings lead to questions
rather than answers. Existence doesn't "conclude" at death. Dickinson is using both meanings of "conclusion": the answer to a question and the end of an affair.
If we divide the poem into
five quatrains we can better see the flow of ideas. The first establishes the
poet’s belief that there are beings beyond earthly life. They are invisible,
like music, but as real as the sound that music makes.
Next we see that there is a
world beyond this one that “beckons” yet “baffles” us. Philosophy and wisdom
can’t help us find it. At the end we must all pass through that “Riddle” that
is death to find out what lies beyond.
Yet so great is the mystery
that scholars continually puzzle over it and the seekers have “borne /
Contempt” of their generation and even crucifixion to gain what seems to be the
prize that beckons.
In the face of uncertainty, Faith
is the usual antidote prescribed. But Dickinson puckishly likens faith to a
young girl embarrassed by a stumble and blushing if anyone saw her. She “Plucks
at a twig of Evidence” to help her balance and glances up at a weathervane to
see if any directions are forthcoming. Yes, faith is nice, but it would be
better if we were offered a bit of evidence and better directions.
Dickinson famously made this
same point in her famous poem “Faith
is a fine invention”:
Faith is a fine invention
For
Gentlemen who see!
But
Microscopes are prudent
In an
Emergency!
A famous
American adage, “Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition,” says the same thing
in a different way and comes from a popular song by Frank Loesser after the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that launched the U.S. into World War II. You
can’t rest on faith to live your life: grab that microscope or that ammunition
and take care of the situation.
Throughout her life Dickinson showed much belief in
God but little faith in doctrine. There is an excellent discussion of the role
church and religion played in her—and her family’s—life at an Emily Dickinson
Museum website. Here is
the first paragraph:
Emily
Dickinson lived in an age defined by the struggle to reconcile traditional
Christian beliefs with newly emerging scientific concepts, the most influential
being Darwinism. Dickinson's struggles with faith and doubt reflect her
society's diverse perceptions of God, nature, and humankind.
The last
four lines of the poem are memorable partly because of the even meter and perfect rhyme
(roll / soul) and mostly because of that “Tooth / That nibbles at the soul.” I
wonder if a poet exists who didn’t know that tooth—in fact, I wonder if any of
us have never felt it. The metaphor is concise: the soul is as a person with a
toothache being treated by a dentist. Despite the painkillers and anesthetics
the dentist may provide, the toothache endures. The metaphor is expanded
however, as it is not the nerves inside the tooth that ache, but the tooth
itself that “nibbles.” What gnaws at us spiritually is alive. Gesturing from
the pulpit may dull the pain as a narcotic might; “Strong Hallelujahs” from the
congregation might help, too. But ultimately that Tooth will nibble at our
souls until the day we pass through that Riddle.
Reminds me of a Zen koan, perhaps the sound of one hand clapping, and how no thought, study, conjecture can solve the riddle, which is born, in another Zen saying by the Great Doubt. The greater the doubt, they say, the greater the enlightenment, the willingness not to make any conclusions, something ED was master of.
ReplyDeleteYes, you have to read ED sideways, eyes half closed. I also like in the poem the echo of Karl Marx who referred to religion as "opium of the people" about 20 years before this poem was written. Dickinson here refers to it as a "narcotic".
Deletereading ED "slant"? Thanks, just found your site and am enjoying it.
DeleteI like how the punctuation in this poem echoes her conjecture. The first line, beginning with such certainty, is the only one that ends with a period. There is something forced in this, like a forced smile, the way you try harder to pretend everything is ok, especially when it is not.
ReplyDeleteThereafter, all of the mid-line commas emphasize hesitation, doubt--
Susan Kornfeld, thank you for all of your insightful interpretations of Emily Dickinson's poetry! I am currently studying all of ED's poetry in my IB Literature class and I was wondering about your opinion regarding Dickinson's view of death overall. She makes reference to death in various ways both ironically in some and in others as peaceful and transitional. Given that Dickinson had many friends die due to tuberculosis and had a constant view of a neighboring cemetery, what do you believe to be Dickinson's ultimate view of death? Again, thank you for all of your thought-provoking analysis of Dickinson's unique poetry.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteSusan Kornfeld, thank you for all of your insightful interpretations of Emily Dickinson's poetry! I am currently studying all of ED's poetry in my IB Literature class and I was wondering about your opinion regarding Dickinson's view of death overall. She makes reference to death in various ways both ironically in some and in others as peaceful and transitional. Given that Dickinson had many friends die due to tuberculosis and had a constant view of a neighboring cemetery, what do you believe to be Dickinson's ultimate view of death? Again, thank you for all of your thought-provoking analysis of Dickinson's unique poetry.
That is too big a question for a 1B essay, so think of how you can pare it down: subject is actual death; contemplation of the experience of death; contemplation of what happens after death; contemplation of Heaven and immortality, etc. Ruth Miller's 'The Poetry of Emily Dickinson' has listings of poems from these categories.
DeleteYou can do a search on my site for some of those words, read the poems and discussions, and do pretty well on the subjects.
As to the cemetery view: I don't think it is a big factor. ED was writing most of her poetry during the Civil War; Victorians had a fascination with death; and in her Calvinist milieu there was much to-do about the afterlife.
I will say that many of ED's poems seem rather contradictory in their treatment of death. So another paring down you might do is to pick one approach, e.g., happy heaven, or waiting for the Resurrection, or Heaven is not what we (they) were told...etc.
Good luck hunting!
I love the discussion of her double meaning of the word "conclusion" - is it the end of life or a sense of surety/finality of knowledge? Her poem is about the lack of closure in both, I think.
ReplyDeleteGood points. I agree -- thanks for the thoughtful comment!
DeleteWe apparently have no manuscript of F373 in ED’s handwriting, so its original format is a guess. One long stanza of 20 lines seems undickinsonian. Given her penchant for quatrains, Susan K’s suggestion of five quatrains works better for me than a single-stanza format.
ReplyDeleteEverything ED writes posits some supernatural entity. She may be pissed with that entity’s unconcern for the welfare of us humans, but she’s firm about its existence. She never takes the leap that God is a human invention, a fiction we humans created because we foresee death and need some reassurance that “surely there is a reason for our existence, surely there is more ‘out there’ than our fallible senses detect”. (However, I vaguely recall a last line in a pre-F373 poem that conjectures something like “If God exists” but can’t put my Google on it now.)
Bottom line, the tooth that nibbles at ED’s soul is her old acquaintance, doubt, which she inherited from her father, who refused to take communion until 1850. Doubt got her into deep trouble at Mount Holyoke Seminary for Women in 1847-48, but that’s another story, partly told.
Franklin (Work Metadata, 1998) definitively states “Manuscript About summer 1862, in Fascicle 18 (h 26, 26a)”. However, Harvard Library offers no facsimile of F373.
ReplyDeleteIn his blog, The Career of Freedom, Greg Darms definitively states: “The poem “This World is not conclusion.” [Fr 373] was written in 1862 and bound by the poet in a little booklet (Fascicle 18), along with 14 other poems. “This World” follows the much-anthologized “After great pain, a formal feeling comes” [Fr 372], handwritten on the same sheet of paper”.
https://www.apraksinblues.com/apk-article/certain-uncertainties-speculative-readings-of-emily-dickinsons-this-world-is-not-conclusion/
Elsewhere, I’ve read the two poems are on front and back of one sheet in Fascicle 18. Harvard offers a facsimile of F372, but that document appears to be in Mabel Todd’s handwriting. No evidence of F373 shows through the F372 page, as is often the case with verso poems in ED’s handwriting.
I just want to say that Larry B is very wise and smart. I had to memorize this poem for my 8th grade class. It was very self reflective and I enjoyed it very much. I am a big Emily Dickinson fan and have read a lot of her poems and this was my favorite one.
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